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Transcript
High-Yield Infectious
Disease :
A Review
David M. Bonnet
Hospitalist and Assistant Professor of Medicine
Scott and White HealthCare
Texas A&M University
Topics Discussed
(in no particular order…..)




Health Care Associated Infections,
including Infection in Transplant
Patients
Bioterrorism
New Topics in Antibiotics
Frequently Tested Topics
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
•
•
•
•
•
Diagnose disease states that are less common
and confusing
Improve management of comorbidities that may
complicate care
Improve familiarity with some of the new
antibiotics
Improve familiarity with identification and
management strategies in bioterrorism
Review frequently tested topics
Case #1

57 yo female status
post liver
transplantation 18
months ago presents
with acute onset of
dyspnea and dry
cough. Pt’s current
therapy consists of
tacrolimus, Imuran,
and inhaled
pentamidine. She has
an allergy to sulfa.
Case #1
Physical Exam findings are
as follows:
Vitals-- 38.0C BP-140/78
pulse-114 RR-25 Pulse Ox86% on RA
Lungs- fine crackles
bilaterally
CBC, BMP, U/A all normal.

CXR shows bilateral opacities
CT shows bilateral fine
alveolar and interstitial
infiltrates.
Sputum sample cannot be
obtained.
What is the likely cause?
A.
B.
C.
D.
E.
F.
Aspergillus
fumigatus
Candida glabrata
Candida kansasii
Pneumocystis
jirovecii
Staphylococcus
aureus
Streptococcus
pneumoniae
Case #2

27 yo male with 2
day history of
diarrhea (>10 BMs
daily) with
worsening
abdominal pain
and fever.
Recently
underwent dental
surgery for which
he received
Unasyn and
clindamycin.
Physical exam and
ancillary testing:
Tmax- 38.8C Pulse120 RR-22 BP-90/52
Abdomen is
distended, and bowel
sounds are absent.
WBC- 28 BUN/Cr–
26/2.7 Albumin of
2.1

CASE #2
Which of the following is the most appropriate?
A.
B.
C.
D.
E.
F.
Intravenous metronidazole and oral
vancomycin
Intravenous metronidazole and
intravenous vancomycin
Oral metronidazole
Intravenous vancomycin
Oral metronidazole and oral vancomycin
Oral vancomycin
CASE # 2 CONTINUED
Patient spent a week in ICU. Subsequently transferred to
the general medical floor to a two-bed hospital room. In
addition to bleach, which of the following would be the
most effective in preventing the spread of C. diff?
Barrier precautions and alcohol hand sanitizer
Aerosolized hydrogen peroxide “bomb”
Barrier precautions and soap and water for hand
hygiene
D. Airborne precautions and alcohol hand sanitizer
E. Droplet precautions and soap and water for hand
hygiene
F. Airborne precautions and soap and water for hand
hygiene
A.
B.
C.
Case #3

A 19 yo male is
hospitalized for fever,
shaking chills, and
worsening abdominal
discomfort and pain for 1
week. Patient underwent
cardiac transplantation 3
years ago due to
congenital defect. His
immunosuppressive
regimen consists of
cyclosporine, trimethoprimsulfamethoxazole, and
acyclovir.






VS- Tmax 38.6, BP-110/72,
RR- 16-18, HR-78
Lungs-clear
Heart- regular, rhythmic,
Normal s1, s2
Abdomen- absent bowel
sounds; notable rebound
diffusely; exquisite
tenderness to palpation
Abdominal X-ray shows
free air and ileus—
Surgery is consulted,
exploratory laparotomy is
performed and a jejunal
perforation is found.
CASE #3
Infection with which of the following would
explain the patient’s bowel perforation?
A.
B.
C.
D.
E.
Herpes simplex virus
Strongyloides stercoralis
Cytomegalovirus
Escherichia coli O127
Giardia lamblia
Case #4

37 yo woman with
history of Chronic
Hepatitis C from a
blood transfusion
for which she has
declined treatment.
While vacationing
in Aruba, she fell
while swimming
and cut her hand
on an oyster shell.
Case #4
Physical Exam:
VS- 39.3 Pulse-107
RR-22 BP-88/62

Hand is shown
Abdomen is
distended with fluid
wave. Liver and
spleen not palpable.
CASE #4
Which of the following is the most likely cause?
Acinetobacter baumanii
 Streptococcus pyogenes
 Pasteurella multocida
 Rickettsia rickettsii
 Vibrio vulnificus
 Clostridium tetani

Case #5

45 yo man with
history of
splenectomy
following car
accident is bitten by
his dog on his leg.
Immunizations are
UTD, including H.
influenza and
pneumococcal.




Multiple blood
cultures reveal gram
negative rods and
xray of hand shows
no gas nor foreign
body.
Leg is erythematous
with no drainage
LFTs: ALT- 556 AST390
Peripheral smear
shows Howell-Jolly
bodies
CASE #5
Which of the following is the most likely cause of the patient’s
presentation?
Capnocytophagia canimorsus
 Pasteurella multocida
 Salmonella typhi
 Streptococcus pyogenes
 Staphylococcus aureus
 Escherichia coli

Case #6

37yo male TSA
employee presents
to the ED due to 2
day history of fever
and dyspnea. No
recent sick
contacts or
exposures. Patient
is febrile,
diaphoretic and
toxic appearing
Case #6




Tmax 38.0C, BP92/56 RR-32 Pulse110
Coarse bronchial
breath sounds are
heard
Ancillary testing shows
a WBC of 16 and CXR
shows widened
mediastinum and
bilateral pleural
effusions.
Buffy coat gram stain
shows “boxcar”
shaped gram-positive
bacilli
CASE #6
Which of the following is the most appropriate treatment?
A.
B.
C.
D.
Cipro, rifampin, and vancomycin
Penicillin, rifampin, and vancomycin
Erythromycin, vancomycin, and rifampin
Erythromycin, clindamycin, and rifampin
BIOTERRORISM
Bioterrorism: An Overview



Formerly taboo
subject now out in
the open
Bioterrorism
potentially a greater
threat than
conventional terrorist
attack
Fatality level likely
greater than
previous attacks
Examples
throughout history:
1. Rome
2. Siege of Kaffa
3. French and Indian
War
4. American
Revolution
5. WWI and WWII
6. 2001 Anthrax
attacks

Working Group on Civilian
Biodefense
Category A
organisms
 Anthrax
 Botulinum toxin
poisoning
 Smallpox
 Plague
 Tularemia
 “viral hemorrhagic
fevers” (Lassa,
Marburg, and
Ebola)
-obtaining and
producing biologic
weapons is relatively
easy
-Production is
comparatively simple
-Dispersion is
straightforward
Anthrax (Bacillus anthracis)







Gram positive aerobic rod that forms extremely hardy
spores
Incubation period; 1-60 days
Three types: cutaneous (woolsorter’s disease)
inhalational (pulmonary) and gastrointestinal
Appears as a Gram positive “boxcar” bacilli
Inhalational anthrax presents as a nonspecific flu-like
illness with cough, dyspnea, and chest pain that rapidly
progresses to shock and death
Initial findings may include mediastinal widening, pleural
effusions, and less commonly, infiltrates.
Cutaneous anthrax includes painless, pruritic,
edematous papule with possible hemorrhagic and/or
necrotic progression.
Anthrax (Bacillus
anthracis)
Anthrax (Bacillus anthracis)
Treatment:
 Fluoroquinolone
or
Doxycycline
plus
 One or two of the
following gram positive
covering (Penicillin,
erythromycin, rifampin,
vancomycin, or
clindamycin)
 No isolation required
 Live vaccine targeting
toxins, but limited
availability
Case #7
A 14 yo boy with chronic
constipation is evaluated in
the ER for blurred vision,
diplopia, slurred speech,
nasal regurgitation of fluid,
and BL upper extremity
weakness. Visual
symptoms began first,
followed by upper
extremity findings several
hours later. Began less
than 24 hours ago. This
ED has seen four similar
patients in the last 24
hours. Pt’s only
medication is a magnesium
containing laxative that he
uses infrequently. He did
use it today.
On physical exam,
Patient is afebrile, RR-12,
BP 100/50, HR 50-60,
Pupils are dilated,
Extraocular movements
show bilateral deficits in
cranial nerve IV. He
cannot abduct his arms
against resistance.
CBC, BMP, CT, and LP are
performed; all results are
normal.
What is the most
likely diagnosis?
Hint: note the ophthalmoplegia and ptosis in the left
picture and the fixed, dilated pupils in the right. Child
was fully conscious at time of photo.
A. Multiple
sclerosis
B. Guillain-Barre
syndrome
C. Myasthenia
gravis
D. Poliomyelitis
E. Botulism
Botulism







Caused by toxin from anaerobic gram positive bacillus
Clostridium botulinum
Naturally occurring botulism develops from
contaminated food, particularly canning or pickling
Use as a bioweapon would involve intentional
contamination of food or aerosolized toxin
**Classical clinical triad is bulbar palsy, afebrile with
clear sensorium, flaccid descending paralysis
**Five D’s: diplopia, dysphonia, dysarthria, dysphagia,
descending, symmetric flaccid paralysis that develops
12-72 hours after exposure
No fever and preservation of mental status
Treatment is antibotulinum immune globulin and
supportive care
Case #8

59yo man comes to
ED with a 2 day
history of fever,
headache, diffuse
myalgia, abdominal
pain, malaise, and
mouth sores,
followed by a painful
papular rash that
began on face and
trunk and extended
to arms and legs.
Patient had
chickenpox as a
child.

Physical exam
shows a toxic
appearing man
febrile to 39.1C HR110 RR-22 and
normal BP

Patient’s appearance
is as shown
Case #8
Which of the
following is the most
appropriate
management for
close contacts of the
patient?
A. Prophylaxis with
acyclovir
B. Prophylaxis with
Cidofovir
C. Vaccinia
vaccination
D. Hyperimmune
globulin injection

Smallpox
Smallpox








Caused by a DNA virus
Last wild-type case eliminated in 1977, but still
exists in laboratories around the world.
Most of the world’s population is not immune
because routine immunization was discontinued.
Presents with high fever and malaise followed by
vesicular/papular/pustular rash which begins on
face and extremities and spreads to trunk
Skin lesions, unlike chickenpox, are in
synchronous stages of development (e.g. All
papules, all vesicles
No. Treatment. (other than supportive)
Vaccine if exposure within 7 days
Respiratory and contact isolation
Case #9

42 yo man is
hospitalized with
cough, fever (38.8C)
and pleuritic chest
pain immediately after
attending a soccer
game, Seven people
who also attended the
game with patient
have been
hospitalized with
pneumonia. One has
died.



Physical exam and
ancillary testing show
HR of 114 and RR of
28 with 88% RA Pulse
ox. Lungs show
egophony on the right.
WBC-18.8 with 20%
bandemia
CXR shows dense
infiltrate in the right
middle and right lower
lobes with air
bronchograms. Blood
cultures NGTD
Case #9

A.
B.
C.
D.
Which of the
following is the most
likely diagnosis?
Inhalational
anthrax
Mycoplasma
pneumonia
Methicillin resistant
staphylococcus
aureus
Tularemia
Tularemia (Francisella
tularensis)






Natural occurring zoonosis with features
similar to Yersinia
Caused by a gram negative coccobacillus
Typically transmitted through ingestion of
food (oropharyngeal tularemia) or through
insect vector bites (oculoglandular fever)
In a bioterrorism attack, an unexplained
pneumonia like syndrome would be the most
likely presentation of tularemia.
There is no person to person transmission
Recommended treatment is streptomycin
(preferred), or gentamicin, doxycycline, or
ciprofloxacin. Vaccine has limited efficacy.
Case #10
21 yo female is brought
to ED with one day
history of delirium and
fever
 Physical exam Tmax
39.5C, BP- 84/44 HR132 RR-34. Oriented
only to person.
Significantly labored
breathing. No
lymphadenitis.
Abdomen-unremarkable.
 WBC-32 CXR- diffuse
bilateral alveolar
infiltrates

WBC-32 CXR- diffuse
bilateral alveolar
infiltrates
 Peripheral blood smear
shows gram negative
coccobacilli with bacteria
that look like safety pins.
Infection with which is
most likely?
a) Francisella tularensis
b) Salmonella enterica
c) Staphylococcus
aureus
d) Aeromonas
e) Yersinia pestis
f)
Streptococcus
pneumoniae

Plague (Yersinia Pestis)
Plague (Yersinia Pestis)




Systemic infection
caused by gramnegative bacillus (or
coccobacillus)
Spread by
aerosolization of the
bacteria or by
inoculation from flea
bites
Consists of three
clinical syndromes:
bubonic, pneumonic,
and septicemic
Person-to-person
spread is possible
Plague (Yersinia Pestis)



Systemic infectionmay induce
overwhelming sepsis
in an otherwise
healthy person.
Antibiotics and patient
isolation for the first 48
hours of therapy to
prevent secondary
spread of pneumonic
plague
Mortality rate
approaches 100% if
not treated with
antibiotics within 24
hours of developing
symptoms.
Plague (Yersinia Pestis)


Gram stain shows
small gram negative
coccobacilli.
Wayson stain shows
pathognomonic
bipolar “closed
safety-pin”
appearance
Reduced the world
population from 450
million to 350-375
million in the 14th
century
New Topics in Antibiotics
New Topics in Antibiotics

New Antimicrobial Agents

New Uses for older drugs

Antibiotic dosing

Antibiotic stewardship and rational use
New Antibiotics
Ceftaroline
 Daptomycin
 Tigecycline
 Fidaxomicin
 Telavancin
 Fosfomycin

Ceftaroline
(Saravolatz, et al “Ceftaroline: A Novel
Cephalosporin with Activity against
Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus Aureus”
CID 2011:52 (1 May)
 New parenteral broad-spectrum
cephalosporin
 Broad activity against MDR gram-positive
bacteria, including Streptococcus
Pneumoniae and Staphylococcus Aureus,
including methicillin resistant, vancomycinresistant, linezolid resistant, and daptomycinnonsusceptible strains
 Antibiotic activity similar to those of other Blactams; binding to pencillin-binding proteins
and inhibiting cell wall synthesis.

Ceftaroline






In vitro activity suggests activity vs. VRE,
but no clinical data yet to support in vivo
efficacy.
Variable activity vs. enterobacteriaceae
No activity against nonfermentative
gram-negative bacilli, including
Pseudomonas aeruginosa
Side effect profile similar to comparator
drugs
Possible synergy with tobramycin vs.
MRSA
Twice daily IV dosing (600mg)
Daptomycin
Daptomycin is a novel lipopeptide used in
the treatment of certain infections caused by
Gram-positive organisms. It is a naturally
occurring compound found in the soil
saprotroph Streptomyces roseosporus.
 Daptomycin has a distinct mechanism of
action, disrupting multiple aspects of bacterial
cell membrane function. It appears to bind to
the membrane and cause rapid
depolarization resulting in a loss of
membrane potential leading to inhibition of
protein, DNA, and RNA synthesis, which
results in bacterial cell death.

Daptomycin
Daptomycin is active against Gram-positive
bacteria only. It has proven in vitro activity
against enterococci (including glycopeptideresistant enterococci (GRE)), staphylococci
(including MRSA), streptococci and
corynebacteria.
 Daptomycin is approved in the United States
for skin and skin structure infections caused
by Gram-positive infections, Staphylococcus
aureus bacteremia and right-sided S. aureus
endocarditis. It binds avidly to pulmonary
surfactant, and therefore cannot be used in
the treatment of pneumonia

Tigecycline
Tigecycline is a glycylcycline marketed by
Wyeth under the brand name Tygacil. It was
developed in response to the growing prevalence
of antibiotic resistance in bacteria such as
Staphylococcus aureus and Acinetobacter
baumannii. The New Delhi metallo B-lactamase
multidrug-resistant Enterobacteriaceae has also
shown susceptibility to tigecycline.
 This antibiotic is the first clinically-available drug
in a new class of antibiotics called the
glycylcyclines. It is structurally similar to the
tetracyclines and is actually a derivative of
minocycline. Tigecycline has a substitution at the
D-9 position which is believed to confer broad
spectrum activity

Tigecycline


Tigecycline is bacteriostatic and is a
protein synthesis inhibitor which occurs
by binding to the 30S ribosomal subunit
of bacteria.
Tigecycline is given intravenously was at
least equal to intravenous vancomycin
and aztreonam to treat complicated skin
and skin structure infections (cSSSI),
and to intravenous imipenem and
cilastatin to treat complicated
intrabdominal infections (cIAIs) in phase
III FDA trials.
Tigecycline

Tigecycline is active against many Gram-positive
bacteria, Gram-negative bacteria and anaerobes –
including activity against MRSA, Stenotrophomonas
maltophilia, Haemophilus influenzae, and Neisseria
gonorrhoea and multi-drug resistant strains of
Acinetobacter baumannii.

It has no activity against Pseudomonas or Proteus
species.

New information suggests that use of tigecycline is
associated with a significant increase in mortality and
noncure rates in 13 RCTs (Prasad, et al CID June 15,
2012:54) for both non-FDA approved and approved
clinical uses, suggesting the possibility of inadequate
antimicrobial activity.
Fidaxomicin


Fidaxomicin (trade name Dificid) is the
first in a new class of narrow spectrum
macrocyclic antibiotics.
Fidaxomicin is non-systemic, meaning it
is minimally absorbed into the
bloodstream, it is bactericidal, and it has
demonstrated selective eradication of
pathogenic Clostridium difficile with
minimal disruption to the multiple species
of bacteria that make up the normal,
healthy intestinal flora.
Fidaxomicin

Works by inhibiting the bacterial
enzyme RNA polymerase, resulting in
the death of Clostridium difficile. It is
active against gram positive bacteria
especially clostridia.

13.3% of the subjects in phase III trials
had a Clostridium difficile recurrence
with fidaxomicin vs. 24.0% with oral
vancomycin.
Telavancin
Telavancin (trade name Vibativ) is a
bactericidal lipoglycopeptide for use in MRSA
or other Gram-positive infections. Telavancin
is a synthetic derivative of vancomycin.
 Telavancin has a dual mechanism of action:
like vancomycin, telavancin inhibits bacterial
cell wall synthesis. In addition, it disrupts
bacterial membranes by depolarization
through inhibition of peptidoglycan synthesis.
 10-fold greater activity than vancomycin in
inhibiting syntheses of peptidoglycan in intact
MRSA cells.

Telavancin
The FDA approved the drug in September
2009 for complicated skin and skin structure
infections (cSSSI), as well as gram-positive
pneumonia.
 Consistently active against Staphylococcus
aureus, (including MRSA, linezolid-resistant,
daptomycin non-susceptible and vancomycinintermediate strains), Clostridium species,
Enterococcus, Streptococcus species, as well
as Bacillus anthracis.
 Telavancin associated with higher rates of
renal events, altered taste, and nausea and
vomiting, but lower rates of pruritus and
infusion-related events, compared with
vancomycin.

Fosfomycin
What’s old is new again: originally
described and isolated on 1969 from
cultures of Streptomyces species.
 Now used for the treatment of
uncomplicated UTIs caused by E. coli
and Enterococcus faecalis.
 Broad-spectrum activity against grampositive and gram-negative bacteria.

Fosfomycin

Form of the medication for intravenous
use is fosfomycin disodium, which
could limit it’s usefulness in patients
with heart failure or whom are on
hemodialysis.

Current conventional wisdom
suggests using fosfomycin in
combination, rather than as
monotherapy
New Uses for Older
Antimicrobials


Linezolid and ertapenem: have been
shown to be effective for treating diabetic
foot infections without osteomyelitis.
(Treatment should be limited to 10-14
days for each due to cost and potential
risks of long-term therapy.
Colistin and polymxyins- unique
spectrum for multidrug-resistant A.
Baumannii, Pseudomonas species,
ESBL-producing E.coli and Klebsiella
pneumoniae
Case #11


45 yo woman with DMII
presents with fever, chills
and hyperglycemia.
Medications include
Lantus, Novolog sliding
scale, and aspirin.
Physical exam shows temp
of 39.0C, BP 82/48, HR112 RR-24. Substantial
area of necrosis on the
plantar aspect of the left
foot, with warmth and
surrounding erythema.
Probe between one of the
many fissures between the
patient’s toes do not
demonstrate tracking. MRI
is pending.



A.
B.
C.
D.
E.
WBC-29.3 H/H—9.4/30.1
BUN/Cr- 36/1.9 ESR-112
Rest of the lab work is
unremarkable.
Which of the following is
the best empiric treatment
option?
Vancomycin plus
metronidazole
Colistin
Ciprofloxacin
Ceftazidime
Vancomycin plus
imipenem
CASE #11 CONTINUED
The aforementioned patient is found to have osteomyelitis. After debridement, ID
recommends 6 weeks of vancomycin and imipenem, which the patient elects to do at
home. After 3 days of inpatient vancomycin, patient is discharged. Her serum
creatinine at discharge is 1.1 mg/dL. 5 days later, the home health infusion nurse
reports that the patient’s serum creatinine is 0.9 mg/dL and her vancomycin trough is
18.
Given that her weight is 61kg, which of the following is the most appropriate
management of the patient’s therapy?
A.
B.
C.
D.
E.
Adjust vancomycin dose for a peak level of greater than 40.
Adjust vancomycin to a dose of 20 or greater
Reduce vancomycin level dose by 50%
Recheck serum creatinine and change vancomycin to
linezolid
Complete vancomycin therapy without drug-level
monitoring
Antibiotic Stewardship


Programs aim to reduce
unnecessary use of
antibiotics, with particular
attention to those drugs
that are most likely to
change the hospital
environment to favor more
resistant bacteria.




63yo homeless woman is
found unconscious in a
snowdrift
Tmax 33.0C, BP- 70/30,
HR- 42, RR-10
Numerous draining skin
lesions are noted.
Pt successfully
resuscitated and started on
Cefepime and Vancomycin,
but blood cultures grow
MRSA, all 4 bottles.
At hospital day #3, patient
improves, and pharmacy
recommends changing
antibiotic regimen to
nafcillin alone.
Why?????????
A.
B.
C.
D.
Need for fewer daily infusions
Cost-saving
Reduced risk of nephrotoxicity
Reduction of selection for resistant
colonizing organisms
CASE #12
40 yo missionary traveling to
Guinea in Western Africa seeks
disease prevention advice. He will
be camping in tents and is
otherwise healthy with no medical
problems or allergies.
Which of the following is
inappropriate advice for the
A. Carbonated water
patient?
B.
C.
D.
E.
(soda) is safe to drink
Hot tea is safe to drink
Do not use citronella based insect repellents
Sleep under bed netting
Locally made ice is safe to consume.
What other advice would you
offer?
Immunizations: which include
hepatitis A, typhoid, and yellow fever.
 Prescription for traveler’s diarrhea
 Malaria prophylaxis
 Information about careful contact with
local dogs
 Travel related automobile injury

Thank you and enjoy the
resort!!